TY - JOUR
T1 - Hedging on the Hill
T2 - Does Political Hedging Reduce Firm Risk?
AU - Christensen, Dane M.
AU - Jin, Hengda
AU - Sridharan, Suhas A.
AU - Wellman, Laura A.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors appreciate helpful comments from Suraj Srinivasan (department editor), an anonymous associate editor, two anonymous reviewers, Anne Beatty (discussant), Amanda Beck, Sam Bonsall, Jennifer Brown, Matt DeAngelis, Lucile Faurel (discussant), Nathan Goldman (discussant), Landon Mauler, Brian Miller, Karl Muller, Kyle Peterson, Spencer Pierce, Grace Pownall, Brady Twedt, Beverly Walther, and participants at Emory University, Georgia State University, the University of Utah, the 2019 Chinese Accounting Professors’ Association of North America (CAPANA) conference, the 2019 American Accounting Association (AAA) Annual Meeting, and the 2019 Western AAA Doctoral Student Faculty Interchange. They also thank Arthur Morris for sharing code for identifying government customers and Kyle Petersen for sharing competition data.
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright: © 2021 INFORMS
PY - 2022/6
Y1 - 2022/6
N2 - We examine whether firms’ political hedging activities are effective at mitigating political risk. Focusing on the risk induced by partisan politics, we measure political hedging as the degree to which firms’ political connections are balanced across Republican and Democratic candidates. We find that greater political hedging is associated with reduced stock return volatility, particularly during periods of higher policy uncertainty. Similarly, greater political hedging is associated with reduced crash risk, investment volatility, and earnings volatility. Moreover, the reduction in earnings volatility appears to relate to both a firm’s taxes and its operating activities, as we find that greater political hedging is associated with reduced cash effective tax rate volatility and pretax income volatility. We further find investors are better able to anticipate future earnings for firms that engage in political hedging, suggesting that political hedging helps improve firms’ information environments. Lastly, we perform an event study using President Obama’s Clean Power Plan. We find that on the days this policy proposal was debated in Congress, energy and utility firms experienced heightened intraday return volatility (relative to other firms and nonevent days). However, this heightened volatility is mitigated for energy and utility firms that are more politically hedged. Overall, we conclude that political hedging is an effective risk management tool that helps mitigate firm risk.
AB - We examine whether firms’ political hedging activities are effective at mitigating political risk. Focusing on the risk induced by partisan politics, we measure political hedging as the degree to which firms’ political connections are balanced across Republican and Democratic candidates. We find that greater political hedging is associated with reduced stock return volatility, particularly during periods of higher policy uncertainty. Similarly, greater political hedging is associated with reduced crash risk, investment volatility, and earnings volatility. Moreover, the reduction in earnings volatility appears to relate to both a firm’s taxes and its operating activities, as we find that greater political hedging is associated with reduced cash effective tax rate volatility and pretax income volatility. We further find investors are better able to anticipate future earnings for firms that engage in political hedging, suggesting that political hedging helps improve firms’ information environments. Lastly, we perform an event study using President Obama’s Clean Power Plan. We find that on the days this policy proposal was debated in Congress, energy and utility firms experienced heightened intraday return volatility (relative to other firms and nonevent days). However, this heightened volatility is mitigated for energy and utility firms that are more politically hedged. Overall, we conclude that political hedging is an effective risk management tool that helps mitigate firm risk.
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U2 - 10.1287/mnsc.2021.4050
DO - 10.1287/mnsc.2021.4050
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85132948928
SN - 0025-1909
VL - 68
SP - 4356
EP - 4379
JO - Management Science
JF - Management Science
IS - 6
ER -